Top tracks
Listeners also bought
Other Rhythm & Blues albums
Put your hands on the remote! browse music »Risin' with the Blues by Ike Turner
view larger image
fave it Rhythm & Blues
14 tracks | 53 minutes
Released Aug 2006
on ZOHO
Click
for a 30-second preview. All tracks are 192kbps high fidelity sound quality. Protected WMA $0.77 or unprotected MP3 $0.88.
listen album 30sec. shuffle buy CD review album promote album
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:37 Gimme Back my Wig lyrics BUY MP3 03:37 Gimme Back my Wig lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:37 Gimme Back my Wig
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 02:57 Caldonia lyrics BUY MP3 02:57 Caldonia lyrics "GIFT MP3" 02:57 Caldonia
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:47 Tease Me lyrics BUY MP3 03:47 Tease Me lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:47 Tease Me
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:05 Goin' Home Tomorrow lyrics BUY MP3 03:05 Goin' Home Tomorrow lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:05 Goin' Home Tomorrow
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:20 Jazzy Fuzzy lyrics BUY MP3 04:20 Jazzy Fuzzy lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:20 Jazzy Fuzzy
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:42 I Don't Want Nobody lyrics BUY MP3 03:42 I Don't Want Nobody lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:42 I Don't Want Nobody
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:57 Jesus Loves Me lyrics BUY MP3 03:57 Jesus Loves Me lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:57 Jesus Loves Me
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:26 A Love Like Yours lyrics BUY MP3 03:26 A Love Like Yours lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:26 A Love Like Yours
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:25 Senor Blues lyrics BUY MP3 04:25 Senor Blues lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:25 Senor Blues
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:16 Eighteen Long Years lyrics BUY MP3 03:16 Eighteen Long Years lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:16 Eighteen Long Years
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:38 Rockin' Blues lyrics BUY MP3 04:38 Rockin' Blues lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:38 Rockin' Blues
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 05:00 After Hours lyrics BUY MP3 05:00 After Hours lyrics "GIFT MP3" 05:00 After Hours
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:54 Big Fat Mama lyrics BUY MP3 03:54 Big Fat Mama lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:54 Big Fat Mama
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:46 Bi Polar lyrics BUY MP3 03:46 Bi Polar lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:46 Bi Polar
Ike's back. RISIN' WITH THE BLUES features Ike, backed by the legenday Kings of Rhythm, in his nastiest, most potent vocals ever, with stinging blues guitar and rocking boogie woogie piano.
Editorial review
R&B/pop fans who only know Ike Turner from his brilliant work with ex-wife Tina Turner (and her dark point of view on their marriage and the heavy stories of his rage and drug use) should check out Risin' with the Blues so as to discover the soul of a musician in the midst of the turmoil. True Ike fans recall that he spearheaded the formative years of rock with his early-'50s recorded output and his later scouting for Chess Records. The one thing he never really did was come to the forefront as a singer, and some of the growly vocals on this powerful recording make it clear that his singing, while definitely stylish in its way, is a secondary talent. What's clear from this sizzling set -- and his Grammy nominated, W.C. Handy Award winning 2001 album Here and Now -- is that he's still at the top of his musical game. The real joys of this disc are his scorching guitar energy, followed by his jumpy boogie-woogie piano. It's pretty much a funky and humor-laden bluesfest throughout, from his funked-up update of "Gimme Back My Wig" to the shuffling blues of "Tease Me." He finds a balance between tongue in cheek attitudes (as on the retitling of "Five Long Years" to "Eighteen Long Years," a reference to his marriage to Tina) with more heartfelt touches on softer songs like "A Love Like Yours." He also ventures into spirited New Orleans territory on "Goin' Home Tomorrow" and offers a prayer of forgiveness for his countless lifelong sins by declaring that "Jesus Loves Me." Hey, who said great gospel singers couldn't be crazy and tormented? Whatever one thinks of Ike Turner personally, there's no denying the man's contribution to several genres of music, and it's good to see them celebrated with so much zeal in his later years. ~ Jonathan Widran, All Music Guide
Bio / Background
There is no denying Ike Turner’s place in musical history. While the general public may know about his heyday with the Ike & Tina Turner Revue during the ‘60s (a meteroic rise to fame that peaked with their early ‘70 hits “Proud Mary” and “Nutbush City Limits”), only hardcore Ike fans and jump blues enthusiasts are aware of him spearheading the formative years of rock ‘n’ roll with the 1951 hit “Rocket 88”(cut in Memphis by his Kings of Rhythm but issued on Chicago’s Chess Records label under the name Jackie Brenston and his Delta Cats). Few know of Turner’s role as a kind of super talent scout of the South during the 1950s for both the Chess brothers of Chicago’s Chess Records or the Bihari brothers of Los Angeles’ Modern/RPM Records. Fewer still know of Ike’s participation on several early ‘50s RPM recordings by B.B.
↓ more ↓King (including his piano accompaniment on King’s 1951 hit “Three O’Clock Blues” and his 1952 follow-up “You Know I Love You”), his playing second guitar on classic 1958 Cobra sessions for Buddy Guy and Otis Rush (including Rush’s signature pieces “Double Trouble” and “All Your Love (I Miss Loving)”), or hammering the 88s behind the likes of Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters, Elmore James, Little Walter, and Willie Dixon during the 1950s.
While playing as a house pianist in West Memphis "blacks only" blues clubs, Ike often snuck in a young white truck driver to sit next to the piano to study Ike's boogie style and dance moves: that kid was Elvis Presley.
In the 1960's, Ike's influence on several of the most recognized names in Rock continued: Janis Joplin sought Turner for vocal coaching, and a young Jimi Hendrix played in Ike's Kings of Rhythm for a time. As a teenager, Bonnie Bramlett was briefly a member of the Ikettes, prior to starting her own rise to stardom a few years later.
In retrospect, Ike’s early innovations seem to have been overshadowed by his notoriety in later years. Following the breakup of Ike & Tina in 1976, Turner entered a dark period of self-imposed exile marked by his heavy cocaine addiction. “I just went into a 15-year party,” is how he put it. The ‘90s were further marred by his incarceration for cocaine possession at the outset of the decade and the public besmirching of his name by the 1993 movie What’s Love Got To Do With It?, which portrays Tina’s take on their tumultuous 18-year relationship. But like the mythical phoenix, Ike would eventually rise from the ashes of his fallen career and begin life anew.
With 2001’s triumphant Here and Now, one thing was eminently clear: the swagger was back in Ike Turner’s stride. That comeback album took critics by surprise, proving that, at age 70, he still had plenty of fire left to give. The album received a GRAMMY nomination for "Best Traditional Blues album" in 2001, and a 2002 W.C. Handy Blues Award in 2002.
On Risin' with the Blues, the R&B icon and Rock & Roll Hall of Famer takes the intensity level up a notch or two with typically slashing-stinging guitar work, rollicking boogie woogie piano flourishes and some of the nastiest, rawest, most potent vocals he’s ever summoned up in a fabled career that dates back more than 50 years.
“All my life I was afraid to come out front and sing,” says the longtime bandleader who throughout his career stood behind a dynamic front person, whether it was Jackie Brenston, Billy Gayles or Clayton Love in the early years or Tina Turner during the ‘60s and ‘70s. “I don’t know whether I was too bashful to sing it myself on stage, I just liked it better in the background.”
Ike is in the background no more. Throughout Risin' with the Blues, he wails with ferocious authority as the vocal front man while wielding a wicked ax and pumping the piano keys with the energy of a man half his age. On an ultra-funky “Gimme Back My Wig,” he snarls his way through the humorous lyrics while on a powerful horn-fueled reading of Eddie Boyd’s “Five Long Years” (retitled here as “Eighteen Long Years” to commemorate the span of Ike’s marriage to Tina), he screams with cathartic abandon. On the infectious shuffle blues “Tease Me,” Ike gets downright menacing, then turns around and delivers the country flavored ballad “A Love Like Yours” with rare poignancy and emotional depth.
Turner cuts a wide stylistic swath on this powerhouse outing. There are bits of jazz extrapolation here in his instrumental “Jazzy Fuzzy” and also on a faithful reading of Horace Silver’s “Senor Blues.” The urgent “I Don’t Want Nobody” is a dance floor number coming directly out of the Zapp-Bootsy Collins playbook while the gospel-flavored “Jesus Loves Me” has Turner testifying with evangelistic zeal. As he says of that confessional offering, “Behind all the crap that they said I been through, it’s like, ‘You can call me a bad boy, but when you get to calling me a bad boy, Jesus loves me anyway.’ And that’s the truth.”
On a rousing rendition of Louis Jordan’s 1946 hit “Caldonia” (cut when Ike was an impressionable 15-year-old growing up in Clarksdale, Mississippi), he pays tribute a jump blues hero of his youth. “That’s my favorite guy, Louis Jordan,” he says. “I grew up with his music -- all those tunes I heard on the jukebox like ‘Caldonia,’ “Let The Good Times Roll’ and “Choo Choo Cha Boogie.’ That was a golden era, man! I was born in 1931 so I came up with all those great tunes by cats like Joe Liggins (1945’s “The Honeydripper”) and Jimmy Liggins (1947’s “Cadillac Boogie”), Roy Brown (1947’s “Good Rockin’ Tonight”), T-Bone Walker (1947’s “Stormy Monday Blues”) and Amos Milburn (1948’s “Chicken Shack Boogie”). That was my music, man! And when I finally formed the Kings of Rhythm, we were doing our own versions of all that stuff, just trying to put our own twist on it.”
Elsewhere on Risin' with the Blues, Turner’s guitar stings with a vengeance on “Rockin’ Blues,” he belts out vocals in robust style on “Goin’ Home Tomorrow” (a New Orleans flavored stroll reminiscent of Earl King’s “Those Lonely, Lonely Nights”) and digs into some downhome fingerstyle blues guitar work on the humorous “Big Fat Mama.” The funky instrumental “Bi Polar” showcases both Ike’s guitar and piano prowess while the organ-fueled closer, “After Hours,” is an Erskine Hawkins slow blues that highlights Ike’s soulful restraint on the ivories.
“Everything you hear on this record comes directly from the heart, man,” maintains the man who has been firmly rooted in the real-deal for over 50 years. “This whole album is about feeling.”
Amen to that. -- Bill Milkowski
Producers : Ike Turner, Ike Turner Jr. Assistant Producer: Roger Nemour.
Recorded at: Ritesonian Studio, Sun Valley, CA; Track Studio, Ventura, CA; QLA Studio, Hollywood, CA; Bombeat Studio, San Diego, CA; Signature Sound Studio, San Diego, CA. Mastered by Phil Magnotti, in April 2006. Photography: Martin Trailer. Package Design : 3 and Co., New York. Executive producers: Roger Davidson & Joachim “Jochen” Becker, Becker Davidson Entertainment L.L.C.
Bookings : The Agency Tel 760 727 4471
www.iketurner.com
↑ less ↑Average Customer Review: 5
no matter what tina saidwyre wrote on August 31, 2008
like the bio says, can't deny ike had the blues before she came along lol. love this album











